State ex rel. Murphy v. Superior Court for Whatcom County

144 P. 32, 82 Wash. 284, 1914 Wash. LEXIS 1499
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 16, 1914
DocketNo. 12035
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 144 P. 32 (State ex rel. Murphy v. Superior Court for Whatcom County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Murphy v. Superior Court for Whatcom County, 144 P. 32, 82 Wash. 284, 1914 Wash. LEXIS 1499 (Wash. 1914).

Opinion

Chadwick, J.

This proceeding is brought to review an order of the superior court in and for Whatcom county, in the matter of the drawing of a grand jury. Relator was indicted, and moved to set aside the indictment upon the ground, among others, that the grand jury was not summoned, drawn, or impaneled as provided by law. This motion was denied.

The grand jury was selected in the following manner: Seventy-eight names were drawn from the jury lists. Six were not found. A certain number claimed exemption under the statutes, so that about forty remained. From this number, the judge presiding selected seventeen to serve as grand jurors. Upon examination, some of these were found to be disqualified or were excused, whereupon, the judge selected a sufficient number from those remaining to make up the number seventeen. The remainder, some eighteen veniremen, were excused without examination or the chance of being drawn as grand jurors.

It is provided in 3 Rem. & Bal. Code, § 94-4, that petit jurors shall be drawn by chance, “and before the drawing is made the boxes shall be shaken up so that the slips bear[286]*286ing the names thereon may he thoroughly mixed, and the drawing of the slips shall depend purely upon chance.”

“Whenever the judge or judges of the superior court of any county in the state shall desire to summon a grand jury, the names of persons to serve as grand jurors shall be drawn from the jury list, as hereinbefore provided.” 3 Rem. & Bal. Code, § 94-5.

That it was the policy of the legislature to preserve the right to have an unbiased and unprejudiced jury and grand jury, and that no suspicion should attach to the manner of its selection in all cases, cannot be questioned. An essential element in selecting jurors is the element of chance. The English speaking people have found no better way and have made it the supreme test of sufficiency. Selection by chance has been indorsed by this court, speaking in harmony with an unbroken current of authority. Mercereau v. Maughlin Mill Co., 53 Wash. 475, 102 Pac. 232; State v. Barnes, 54 Wash. 493, 103 Pac. 792, 23 L. R. A. (N. S.) 932.

In the Mercereau case, it was said:

“While the statute is not clear as to the exact method to be pursued, its purpose is to provide for chance drawing from the box.”

The logic of this observation is that the court should not concern itself with methods, for there may be many methods adopted which would satisfy the law, but that it should insist that the jurors or grand jurors be selected by chance. In the case of State v. Barnes, the court quoted from the text of 24 Cyc. 218, wherein the general rule is laid down that methods may be directory, but the material thing, that the jurors should not be the product of arbitrary selection is so far mandatory as to give ground for challenge if it is not observed. When the statute has said, and this court has said, that a petit jury must be selected by chance and that grand jurors shall be drawn as “hereinbefore provided,” it [287]*287means that the men who are called and sworn to serve as jurors or grand jurors shall be selected, whether in a preliminary way or finally, by chance. In this case, the judge directed the clerk to draw seventy-eight names. In the exercise of a sound discretion he excused a certain number. Out of the remainder, having forty names before him, the judge by his own act and judgment, made up the jury. We find nothing in the statutes or in any authority that has been called to our attention that gives a judge a right to draw or select either petit or grand jurors. At common law, jurors were selected by the sheriff, or by the coroner or by an elisor. The judge never named the jurors.

“As it was an essential principle of the jury trial from the earliest times, that the jurors should be summoned from the hundred where the cause of action arose, the court, in order to procure their attendance, issued in the first instance a writ called a venire facias, commanding the sheriff or other officer to whom it was directed, to have twelve good and lawful men from the neighbourhood in court upon a day therein specified, to try the issue joined between the parties. And this was accordingly done, and the sheriff had his jury ready at the place which the court had appointed for its sitting.” Forsyth, History of Trial by Jury, p. 168.

Under modern practice, the jury lists are made up by an independent agency and are drawn by the clerk of the court. The only function the court has to perform is to pass upon the qualifications of the men so drawn and to make up a final panel for jury service.

It is earnestly contended that, inasmuch as there was a drawing of seventy-eight names from the jury lists, that the law is satisfied, notwithstanding the arbitrary selection by the judge of certain ones to be sworn as grand jurors.

Granting, for the sake of argument, that no real injustice has been done in this particular case, and that a fair jury was selected, to approve the method adopted by the court would be to permit a judge, if he so willed, to provide a grand [288]*288jury of his own choosing in every case under color of law. He might direct the drawing of every man on the jury lists of the county, and, having them so drawn, direct the sheriff to summon only certain favored ones, or he might direct the drawing of a certain number and then proceed to arbitrarily select the men he, and he alone, wanted to serve.

No cases are cited to sustain a practice so fraught with possibilities. In fact, methods which have, designedly or otherwise, circumvented the saving element of drawing by chance have been condemned by the courts and by public opinion whenever and wherever they have been resorted to. To review and quote from authorities would extend this opinion to an interminable length. The question has come before the courts in various forms, and our conclusion is sustained by the following cases: State v. Beckey, 79 Iowa 368, 44 N. W. 679; Shepherd v. State, 80 Miss. 147, 42 South. 544; Boyd v. State, 98 Ala. 33, 13 South. 14; Viers v. State (Okl. Cr.), 134 Pac. 80; Risner v. Commonwealth, 16 Ky. Law 84, 26 S. W. 388; Curtis v. Commonwealth, 23 Ky. Law 267, 62 S. W. 886; Covington & C. Bridge Co. v. Smith, 25 Ky. Law 2292, 80 S. W. 440. If there is any authority to the contrary, it has not been called to our' attention nor have we been able to find it.

The main reliance of counsel, however, is in this: that there is a distinction between the words “drawn” and “impaneled;” that where the word drawn is used in the statute, it means the original drawing by the clerk from the jury lists of the county and that the jury may be impaneled by the arbitrary selection of the judge without doing violence to the statute. Counsel finds comfort in the case of State ex rel. Gibson v. Gilliam, 56 Wash. 29, 104 Pac. 1131, where the court, in discussing the time when those drawn to answer a summons for a grand jury should appear in court and be impaneled, referred to the act of drawing and the act of impaneling as if they were distinct things. They may be [289]*289distinct, for they have various meanings depending upon their settings.

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Bluebook (online)
144 P. 32, 82 Wash. 284, 1914 Wash. LEXIS 1499, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-murphy-v-superior-court-for-whatcom-county-wash-1914.